Why DynaVap Works Differently
Most vaporizers ask you to charge a battery, navigate a menu, and hope the coil holds up. DynaVap skips all of that. Every device in the lineup uses a stainless steel cap with a built-in thermal sensor. Heat it with a torch or an induction heater until you hear the click, pull, and you're done. It's an analog system in the best possible sense: nothing to update, nothing to charge, nothing to break down mid-session.
The materials back that up. DynaVap designs and assembles everything in-house, using stainless steel, titanium, and hardwood depending on the model. These aren't devices you replace every six months. They're the kind of thing people carry for years and still talk about like it's new.
What We Carry in Our DynaVap Collection
Our DynaVap lineup covers the full range the brand makes, from entry-level stainless steel bodies to precision-machined titanium builds. Here's how to think about the options:
Starter Builds
If you're new to DynaVap, the stainless steel bodies are the right place to start. They're durable, affordable relative to the rest of the lineup, and they give you the full DynaVap experience without committing to a premium material. The heat-up time is fast, the hit is clean, and the learning curve is genuinely short.
Titanium and Precision Builds
Titanium conducts heat faster and more evenly than stainless steel, which means slightly quicker heat-up and a more consistent click every time. If you've already used a DynaVap and want to upgrade, titanium bodies and components are worth the step up. Machined wood bodies are also in the mix for people who want something that feels different in the hand.
Induction Heaters
A torch works great. An induction heater works better, at least for home use. Plug one in, drop your DynaVap in, and it heats evenly in seconds without open flame. If you're using a DynaVap at a desk or a coffee table more than you're using it outdoors, an induction heater changes the whole routine.
Accessories and Parts
DynaVap builds everything to be modular. Caps wear out, stems crack, and some people just want to mix and match materials. We carry caps, tips, stems, and carrying cases so you can keep your setup running or build something custom from scratch.
How to Choose the Right DynaVap
The honest answer is that almost anyone should start with a stainless steel model. It performs well, it's built to last, and it teaches you the technique that carries over to every other DynaVap device. Once you've got the click timing down and you know you love the ritual, that's when it makes sense to look at titanium or wood.
If you're buying a DynaVap as a second device or a travel piece, the compact stainless builds are hard to beat. They fit in a pocket, they don't need a charger, and they're discrete in a way that most battery-powered vaporizers aren't. For home use, pair any body with an induction heater and you've got a setup that rivals desktop vaporizers at a fraction of the footprint.
Want more context before you buy? Our blog breaks down the DynaVap experience in detail: Experience the Ultimate in Dry Herb Vaporizers by DynaVap.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a DynaVap actually vaporize, or does it combust?
It vaporizes, as long as you use the click correctly. The audible click from the thermal cap tells you the temperature has hit the vaporization range for dry herb. Pull immediately when you hear it and you're getting vapor. Hold the flame too long after the click and you risk combustion, so the technique matters. Most people dial it in within a session or two.
What kind of torch works with a DynaVap?
Single-flame butane torches work, though they take a bit longer to heat the cap. A double or triple-flame torch gets you to the click faster and more evenly. Jet lighters work too. If you want the most consistent experience at home, an induction heater removes the torching step entirely.
How do I clean a DynaVap?
Isopropyl alcohol is the standard. Disassemble the cap from the body, soak the tip and body in ISO, and use pipe cleaners to clear the airpath. The cap itself just needs a quick wipe. DynaVap's modular design means every part is accessible and easy to clean, which is part of why these devices last so long.
Is DynaVap worth it if I already own a battery-powered vaporizer?
For a lot of people, yes. Battery vaporizers are convenient, but they come with charging cycles, firmware, and coil replacements. A DynaVap has none of that overhead. It's a different kind of session, slower and more deliberate, and plenty of people end up reaching for it more than the electric device they thought they'd never put down.